2 September 2010
Graduate take-off - Are universities doing enough to make students employable?

Graduate take-off - Are universities doing enough to make students employable?
Imperial College London is to launch its first course overseas at a new medical school developed with a university in Singapore.The school, which is due to open in 2013, will award joint Imperial and...

By Jack Stripling, for Inside Higher Ed
Half of the academic chemists who responded to a survey felt they had not always received enough credit for their contributions to papers, according to a study. Jeffrey Seeman, visiting senior...
Recruitment abroad slows amid visa changes and anti-immigration rhetoric. Simon Baker reports
University and college participation in Scotland is on the rise after seven years of decline.

Les Gofton hitches a very enjoyable ride with a silver surfer heading towards the future

Steven Yearley is beguiled by smart and provocative essays that herald the arrival of profound change
This book has been reviewed absolutely everywhere; mostly, it seems, by Pharisees at pains to express their gratitude that they in no way resemble the great Christopher Hitchens. Indeed, The Guardian...
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of Philippe Ariès' L'Enfant et la Vie Familiale sous l'Ancien Régime, translated into English two years later by Robert Baldick as Centuries of...
Do maps themselves contribute to the imposition and construction of social controls, asks Joni Seager
Interest in the child in film has grown in recent years, with texts such as Vicky Lebeau's Childhood and Cinema (2008) and Emma Wilson's Cinema's Missing Children (2003) offering insight into this...
Is that a manual?" the librarian asked when I presented him with Janet Adelman's Suffocating Mothers, her celebrated study of Shakespeare's depiction of the mother. As a casual line from a stranger,...
Carrie Rentschler on an astute look at the price paid by Iraqi and US women in a time of conflict
Call me old-fashioned, naive even, but science fiction has always appealed to me principally as a form of escapism. A means of envisaging a world - an Isaac Asimov/Arthur C. Clarke kind of a world -...